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When Dr. Murray was in college, a friend’s mother, a black doctor, challenged her to consider becoming a physician. Until that moment, her aim was to be a community organizer, a plan that was motivated by her past involvement in civil rights organizing during the sixties. After that conversation she decided to go to medical school. She also learned that at the time the majority of African-American doctors were 50 years of age and older and steadily decreasing in numbers. She admits that in hindsight, she had no idea what it really meant to be a physician, but knew that she would need reliable skills in order to make a living and make a difference. If you know Dr. Murray, particularly her impressive career in public health leadership and activism, then you know that she strongly believes that everything is public health. It is with this spirit that she has managed to impact the way many public health institutions, leaders, practitioners and students think about the issues, the work, and their own careers.

Career in Profile:

1973: Completed her Bachelor of Science in Mathematics

1977: Completed Doctor of Medicine degree

1980: Completed her Masters of Public Health

1977 – 1980: Was the Resident Physician of Internal Medicine and Occupational Medicine at Cook County Hospital in Chicago

1981: Completed residency in Occupational Medicine

1981 – 1982: Worked as an Emergency Room Physician in Chicago

1983 – 1985: Led one of the first Occupational Medical clinics in Canada as Medical Director for the Manitoba Federation in Winnipeg Manitoba.

1985 – Now: Consultant to the International Chemical Worker’s Union and its health and safety staff

1985- 1987: Worked as Assistant Professor in the Department of Community and Occupational health, Director of Environmental and Occupational Medicine and Residency Director of Occupational Medicine at Meharry Medical College

1987 – 1988: Served as Medical Director of Environment and Occupational Health and later as Acting Bureau Chief of the Bureau of Comprehensive Environment/Public Health

1988-1992: Internist

1990: Interim Clinical Director of Internal Medicine at a hospital in Chicago

1992- 1997: Medical Director of and Internist at a two-site Federally Qualified Health Center in Chicago

1997 – 1998: Was Medical Director of two community health centers within the Ambulatory and Community Health Network of Cook County

1998 – 2003: Served as Co-Chief Medical Director of the Ambulatory and Community Health Network of Cook County

2003 – 2007: Served as Chief Medical Officer of the Ambulatory and Community Health Network of Cook County

2006 – Now: Serves as Chief Medical Officer of the Cook County Department of Public Health

2009 – 2011: Elected and served as President of American Public Health Association

2012: Elected as Fellow of the American College of Physicians

What’s a highlight in your career or work that you’ve done that you are particularly proud of?

I don’t think we’ve done anything to be particularly proud of! I think there are lots of activities that I’ve done that I think had impact on other people. At each stage of my career, starting in medical school, there were different things that I thought were more important. For example, when I was in medical school I spent a lot of time trying to make sure that minorities got into medical school, and as a medical student I spent a lot of time trying to collectively organize the minority medical students to make sure that we stayed in medical school. And that meant study groups, a mock anatomy exam, or politically testifying about the lack of admission, all of those things. So I think at each point of my life, because of the nature of what I was doing in my life outside of my profession, certain things become a highlight. You raise a child, then you are really about the conditions in society that impact the health of children. Not that you are not concerned about this at other times. When I was in residency and working at Cook County Hospital, a public hospital, I was concerned about the quality of care available at that hospital, and I’m still concerned about that.

So when you say what are you proud of, well, what I can tell you is that when I was an undergraduate student at Circle, there were more black students in the undergrad program, by percent, than there are today. Do we have something to be proud of? When I was in medical school there were more men and more black men in medical school than black women…today we are the only group where African-American men are there in much smaller percentages than our women and it keeps going down. I think all other things being equal, men and women should be physicians and nurses at equal rates, so why is it that the percent of our men in medical school continues to go down? Is that progress? The same hospital that I spent time with and risked my career and had repercussions, where I was blacklisted in the city (because of my efforts) to try and keep it open, that hospital is in still danger of closing, but for different reasons and at a different time period. So here we are on the eve of a major reform in medical care, the Affordable Care Act, and this public hospital which shaped my career as a physician, is closer to closing now than it has been in the past 20 years. So I don’t think it makes sense to think about tasks that you’ve accomplished. I guess if I had to say, if there’s one thing I was the proudest of, it’s my role as a parent in the broader sense. My nickname in medical school was M&M…Mama Murray. To the extent that I’ve accomplished anything is to the extent that younger people have been influenced or guided by my work.

What’s a challenge that you’ve faced in your career so far?

I think the problem that professionals face, and that I’ve faced, has been the same problem over and over. If you stand up you are in danger of being personally hurt, or hurt career-wise or financially. That never changes. That has certainly happened to me. When people are young, your parents lie to you. They say, “Be good and graduate from high school and college.” But the problem is being a good Negro never stops, because they can always pick away something from you. So understand that if you stand up against a public hospital closing, you might be blacklisted and not be able to get a job. So I spent a couple of years in Canada because I couldn’t get a job in Chicago. That problem and that reputation are always there. I remember I was looking for a job outside of the city and I had two offers. One was in San Francisco at the General Hospital running their Occupational Medical program. The other was working for a Union in Manitoba. So I was discussing the differences between the two options with my mother and I said, “Well this one in California is a prestigious job in my field it would put me on a good academic trajectory, it’s a solid program. The job in Canada is a more political job.” Her position was that it doesn’t really matter what you do. As long as you do something that you know is right, they are not going to respect you anyway so take the job you want. She said, “You are a black woman, there’s nothing you can do to make yourself more acceptable. There’s no way you could twist yourself to be acceptable to white folks, no matter how many degrees you have or brilliant research you do. Nothing you do will make you acceptable so you should do the right thing and do want you want to do.”

Going to the other job wasn’t wrong. That’s the clear message here – you have to do what you think is right because if you do anything else then you are wasting your time. And nothing you do is going to make you acceptable. So that makes it a little easier. There are some people that can be more acceptable, I’m just not one of them. If you are black in America, you are not one of them. There’s nothing you can do to be acceptable. I have great respect for white Americans, upper-class, privileged people that actually are acceptable or can modify their behavior to be acceptable. When they make a decision not to be acceptable that’s a true sacrifice, that’s something to be truly admired. Those of us that are women or colored, there’s nothing we can do anyway. People fool themselves, but there’s nothing that we can really do…so when we do stuff like that it’s really not that heroic or courageous it’s just the way it is.

When it comes to public health in general, what matters to you and why?

Well I think the basic issue in public health hasn’t changed. That is, why some people are healthy and others not. Why are some countries rich and others not? Why are some populations in good shape and others are in bad shape and what can we do to change it? Those questions never change. The only thing that changes is the policy issues of today that can make things better or worse. Today we are still saddled with racism in this country. We have not addressed that, and until we do we have no hope of functioning as a country. The inequalities on all levels, the injustices on all levels, are still there and they ebb and flow, they are not always the same, but right now we are at a period where they are widening since the 1980s. So things are going to get worse for our people, and everyone in the country. Those are the issues of today. Climate change is the issue of today. The north/south divide. If we don’t address them in a rational way, things will get worse. So something like climate change may be out of control, we may get to a point where there’s nothing we can do about it. I don’t think we even understand whether we are close to that point at all. The critical thing is to link it to all of these issues. There’s a connection between the climate change disaster, and the fact that we haven’t addressed racism, and that fact that we have the north/south divide. The notion that today we have the technology to feed and clothe and amuse everyone in any way we could possibly want, the notion that malnutrition is still the leading cause of death in the world, this is a criminal notion. We should be ashamed. So when we talk about public health issues of today…starvation and malnutrition are still the leading cause of death across the globe. When I ask this in my classes at the school of public health, no one ever gets it. No one ever knows that’s the answer. They talk about HIV or Malaria. It’s starvation and malnutrition, as it has been throughout most of human history.

What’s a persistent public health problem that still concerns you today?

Other than starvation or malnutrition? I think the notion that we have the low hanging fruits is a profound conceptual mistake. When I get up in the morning I have to work on something, I can’t work on everything. There’s no question about that. But to think that you can solve one problem and call that a victory is absurd! These problems are all linked together. I can use a jargon word if you would like. We need to fight for social justice! What does that mean? That means you have to fight on all fronts. The minute you ignore a front in a deliberate way, you’ve sown the seed for failure. You can always make the decision that “here are the three most important things that I’m going to work on for the next ten years.” That’s fine, that’s a little different than saying here’s something like racism, or gender issues that I’m going to ignore, and I’m going to worry about small pox. So how we frame problems, these are symptoms. “I’m going to work on youth violence or motor vehicle crashes, immunization, death from malaria”. That is a tool through which you are trying to solve the real underlying forces in society. What are the forces that stratify us? Power and resources, and therefore happiness and outcomes. That’s really what we are talking about. And those things will change according to time and place.

If you could do something about this problem, what would be the ideal solution?

It’s easy to have an ideal solution. The ideal solution would be a society that is socially just. Where you have resources and power equitably distributed. For each according to his means, for each according to his need. You can think of a number of slogans from a number of different fields – political science, history, religion – that express that same notion. I think that those expressions are the heart and soul of public health. Public health concerns itself with health of the whole and that’s the first thing you want. You want the whole and every component of the whole to be as healthy as possible. So those philosophical notions define public health. I don’t think you can define it by saying, “Here is Healthy People 2020; if you solve these objectives you’ll be fine.” I’m not saying we shouldn’t have objectives and try to solve them, or interventions, but I think it’s a mistake to think that we have separate problems siloed in separate areas that you can do actually something about. This is population level stuff, so it doesn’t mean that I have to work on everything. That’s literally impossible. If I never slept I couldn’t do that. But what it does mean is that collectively, as a society, we have to address all of these issues. That’s the problem, it’s hard for people to think not only individual level. That’s why we do stupid stuff, like “I can’t worry about that, it’s too complicated…I can’t worry about the impact of racism on black mortality, so let me just try to make sure teenagers don’t get pregnant.” I’m not for teens getting pregnant, but nobody said that one person has to worry about everything. Collectively, we have to work to address all of these issues at all different levels that they interact.

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